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Computer-Supported Cooperative Work: Historical Evolution, Research Perspectives, and Trends

This lecture provides an introduction to Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), its historical evolution, dimensions, research perspectives, and current trends. Explore case studies and understand the impact of technology on cooperative work.

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Computer-Supported Cooperative Work: Historical Evolution, Research Perspectives, and Trends

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  1. Lecture 22 Computer-Supported Cooperative Work

  2. Today’s Lecture Introduction Historical Evolution Dimensions Research Perspectives and Trends Case Studies

  3. What Is CSCW? • Computer-Supported Cooperative Work is • An applied field of computer technology, especially software, that enables people to work together, not only side-by-side but also, and especially, at a distance • A research area of sociology that studies the effects on people and their work that stem from using computer tools to work cooperatively

  4. What is CSCW? • The field of CSCW focuses on the use of technology to mediate interactions among people • Use: Ethnography, design, … • Technology: Devices, infrastructures, … • Interactions: Text, audio, video, … • People: • Teams, organizations, communities, … • Psychology, organizational behavior, sociology, …

  5. Computer Supported Cooperative Work • The term computer supported cooperative work (CSCW) was first coined by Irene Greif and Paul M. Cashman in 1984, at a workshop attended by individuals interested in using technology to support people in their work[1]. At about this same time, in 1987 Dr. Charles Findley presented the concept of collaborative learning-work. • According to[2], CSCW addresses "how collaborative activities and their coordination can be supported by means of computer systems." On the one hand, many authors consider that CSCW and groupware are synonyms. On the other hand, different authors claim that while groupware refers to real computer-based systems, CSCW focuses on the study of tools and techniques of groupware as well as their psychological, social, and organizational effects. [1] Dourish, P.; Bellotti, V. (1992). "Awareness and coordination in shared workspaces". Proceedings of the 1992 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work. ACM Press New York, NY, USA. pp. 107-114,. [2] Grudin, J. (1988). "Why CSCW applications fail: problems in the design and evaluation of organization of organizational interfaces". Proceedings of the 1988 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work. ACM Press New York, NY, USA. pp. 85-93.

  6. HCI vs. CSCW • HCI: human-computer interaction • Individuals’ interactions and relationships with information technology • May involve > 1 person, but not necessarily • CSCW: human-computer-human interaction • Individuals’ interactions and relationships through information technology • Always > 1 person

  7. Evolution of CSCW • Computer Supported Cooperative Work • Work is [typically] a social activity involving > 1 person • Technology can aid and abet: • Foreground: Communication, coordination, collaboration • Background: Awareness • Bridging time, space, organizational boundaries, … • Computer Supported Cooperative Whatever • Beyond the workplace: increasingly available in other contexts … • Home, car, coffee shops, public places, private places, … • … and applied to non-work activities • Socializing, recreation, staying in touch, …

  8. Trends • Convergence • Computing, telephony, broadcast media • Mobility ( Ubiquity) • Devices: Laptops, PDAs, mobile phones • Infrastructure: WiFi, {2,2.5,3}G, EDGE • Communities • Professional (communities of practice) • Others (Ebay.com, match.com, meetup.com) • Goals • Efficiency vs. fun

  9. Telephony Trends Example

  10. CSCW has many influences • Computer Science • Engineering • Sociology: macro and micro • Psychology • Organizational Studies • Management Studies • Anthropology – study of human kind • Communication • Ethnography -- the description of ethnic groups

  11. CSCW research has many perspectives Hard Determinism • Behavior is inevitably shaped by technology Soft Determinism • Behavior tends to be shaped by technology Co-Determinism • Technology and our intentions control in concert Non-Determinism • We control the uses of technology

  12. Hard Determinism

  13. Dimensions of Cooperation:Time and Space Place/Space • F2F interactions • Post-its • Telephony • Email • Newsgroups • Text chat (IM, SMS) • Calendar / scheduling • Electronic whiteboards • Audio / video conferencing • App. / data sharing • Group editing / annotation • GDSS • Dataflow, workflow • Expertise location • Recommendation Systems • Awareness (media spaces) Time See Bannon and Schmidt, 1991: CSCW: Four Characters in Search of a Context. In Bowers, J. and Benford, S. (Eds) Studies in Computer Supported Cooperative Work – Theory, Practice and Design. North Holland.

  14. Computer Supported Cooperative Work

  15. Thinking of activities from focused to peripheral Awareness Shared experience Social activities Informal interactions Locating colleagues Reciprocity and symmetry are important for collaborative tasks Office sharing Meetings Focused work tasks See Harrison and Bly

  16. CSCW focuses on people working (interacting) with others Community; customers Organization Project/Teams Small Groups Individuals Networked PCs;PDAs, cellphones Workspaces; Media spaces; video conferencing GDSS; Workflow; Workspaces;Media spaces Intranets; document repositories; expertise location Internet; WWW HCI CSCW From Grudin, 1994

  17. Team and Small Group Characteristics • Characteristics • Members know each other • Collaborate to achieve a common goal • Highly focused, interactive • Strong need for communication • Examples • Software development team, proposal writing, conference program committees, small operational groups such as customer support, research project teams • Support technologies include: • Buddy lists, instant messaging, chat, Groove, Quick place, BSCW, video conferencing, data conferencing See Grudin and Poltrock, Tutorial Collaboration Technology in Teams, Organizations, and Communities

  18. Organization Characteristics • Characteristics • Geographically distributed • Hierarchical management structure • Strong need for coordination • Examples • Companies, governments or government agencies, non-profit organizations • Support technologies include: • Email, calendars, workflow, Lotus Notes, intranet applications and webs, document management systems, broadcast video

  19. Community Characteristics • Characteristics • Members do not [all] know each other • Common interests or preferences • Loose structure & interactions • Examples • Citizens of a city or neighborhood • Newsgroups • Virtual world citizens • Auction participants • Support technologies include: • web sites, chat rooms, virtual worlds • Issues: reputation, accountability, anonymity • Civic support often suffers from uneven participation • Lurkers • “Tragedy of the Commons”

  20. Tragedy of the Commons

  21. Groupware vs. Communityware • Groupware • Medium for contacting and interacting with known collaborators in order to achieve a shared goal • Email, Calendars, Chat, Whiteboards, Conferencing • Communityware • Medium for initiating contact / transactions with unknown collaborators who have similar interests and preferences • Newsgroups, Ebay, Amazon, Epinions, Meetup.com, Match.com

  22. Case Study: Shared Calendars • Adoption of Groupware • Managerial Mandate (decide to use) • Discretionary Choice (begin to use) • Effort / benefit tradeoff • Benefit to managers, admins • Effort required by “contributors” • Critical mass required • [nearly] all or nothing Discretionary Adoption of Group Support Software: Lessons from Calendar Applications. L. Palen and J. Grudin, 2002. In B.E. Munkvold (Ed.), Implementing collaboration technologies in organizations, 159-180.

  23. Studies of Calendar Use • Initial interviews (Microsoft) • 5 subjects; different positions, departments • More interviews (Sun) • 40 questions • 12 subjects (users, non-users) • Survey (both) • 20 questions • 3000 people (each site) • Microsoft: 30% response rate • Sun: 50% response rate

  24. Similarities • Widespread adoption (75% of appts) • Sun: 81% • Microsoft: 75% • “Mundane” technology • Part of everyday work • “Hard to imagine life without it”

  25. Differences • Sun • CalendarManager • Default (82%): open calendars • User name + host computer name • Company rolodex • Scheduling, coordinating (inferences) • Microsoft • Schedule+ • Default (81%): free/busy (only) • Scheduling only

  26. Factors affecting adoption • Peer pressure • “widespread expectation” • “plus me”, “browse me” • Exclusive benefits (conf. rooms) • Integration (email “invitations”) • Interface transparency & efficiency • Technical support

  27. Case Study: Intel • intel.com vs. intel-research.net • Intel.com a big mega mall portal for Intel products • Intel-research.net, a collaboration portal for researchers in universities. Intel.com Intel Research

  28. Proactive Displays • Displays that can sense and respondappropriately to the people and activities taking place in their vicinity • Displays • Sensors • Contexts • Content • Interaction Models

  29. “Ambient” Displays Bus Mobile (UC Berkeley)

  30. Ambient Devices Ambient devices are a new genre of consumer electronics characterized by their ability to be perceived at-a-glance (also called "glanceable"). Ambient devices utilize pre-attentive processing to display information: the ability for the brain to perceive information without any apparent cognitive load.

  31. Proactive Displays in the Large Sunset @ 200MHz (PARC) Islamabad Advertisement Screen

  32. Proactive Displays in the Large Alaris E-boards (www.alaris.net)

  33. Proactive Displays at a Conference • AutoSpeakerID • Q/A session • Photo,name,affiliation • Ticket2Talk • Coffee break • Explicit content • One person (at a time) • Neighborhood Window • Lounge area • Implicit content • Multiple people

  34. Experience UbiComp Project • Desire for mutual revelation • show & tell about you & your work; • learn about others & their work • Restricted contexts • Paper / panel sessions • Demo / poster sessions • Reception / breaks • Available content • Explicit: registration info • Implicit: homepage data mining • Stakeholders • people who influence, and are influenced by, displayed content

  35. UbiComp 2003 Deployment • Register (create profile) • www.proactivedisplays.org • WiFi available throughout conference • Activate • Associate profile with RFID tag • Participate • Insert RFID tag into badge cover • Approach a Proactive Display • Choose out at any time • Delete information / profile • Remove RFID tag Proactive displays & the experience UbiComp project

  36. Registration

  37. Activation

  38. Evaluation • Survey (as of Nov. 6, 2003) • 500 attendees • 250 participants • 70 respondents (48 were participants)

  39. Experiences • AutoSpeakerID • 50% of questioners’ tags detected • Oral only, visual only, visual + oral • Fun with picture, name and/or affiliation • “I’m the real <X>” • Ticket2Talk • Conversations, awareness about new & old • “Who’s <X>?!” • Neighborhood Window • Similar to T2T, though more of a novelty factor (and more noise) • “red bishops” • Death Valley

  40. PlasmaPoster • By Churchill, et al., • An interactive display • poster board / bulletin board / billboard • content as “conversational props” • complement/spur to online interaction • social networks and social capital

  41. GroupWear Nametags

  42. GroupWear Nametags • Richard Borovoy, Fred Martin, Mitch Resnick, Brian Silverman (MIT Media Lab) • CHI ’98 • Interpersonal augmentation • facilitating interaction between people, not people & machines • interpersonal displays: display for other people • Q&A: programmed by “dunking” in “bucket kiosks” • issue: how to augment but not distract • lights indicate percentage of similar views, not identifying individual questions

  43. nTAGs • Networking Applications • Common Ground • Idea Sharing • Card Exchange • Network Tracking and Visualizations • Networking Games • Event Management Applications • Lead Capture • Polls and Surveys • Attendance Tracking and Security • Digital Tickets • Event Information • Message Delivery • www.ntag.com

  44. ntags

  45. i-balls • Folk Computing: Revisiting Oral Histories as a Scaffold for Co-Present Communities • Rick Borovoy, et al., MIT Media Lab • CHI 2001 • i-balls: key-chain computer programs • Key-chain-sized video game devices (SEGA / DreamCast) • Animations, games, etc. • “Hot potatoes”, “Quests”, “Randomizers”, “Hitchers”, “Secret i-balls”, “Multi-author i-balls” • Create, trade, track, teach (everyone, everywhere) i-balls

  46. i-balls

  47. Familiar Stranger http://berkeley.intel-research.net/paulos/research/familiarstranger/

  48. Media Spaces • Media Spaces: Environments for Informal Multimedia Interaction • PARC, EuroPARC, 1980s-90s • Support for informal, unplanned and unstructured interactions • Summary paper by Wendy Mackay • In Michel Beaudouin-Lafon, editor, Computer-Supported Cooperative Work, Trends in Software Series. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 1999 • http://www-ihm.lri.fr/~mackay/pdffiles/TRENDS99.Mediaspaces.pdf

  49. RAVE

  50. Portholes • Passive awareness • Distributed workgroups • No explicit video connections

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